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NORTH LAUDERDALE -- A man giving a graveside interview to a television reporter about his daughter`s suicide pulled out a gun on Monday and shot his ex-wife to death when she unexpectedly showed up at the cemetery, witnesses said. As a TV camera rolled shortly before 5 p.m., Emilio Nunez, 34, pulled a semiautomatic handgun and gunned down his ex-wife, Maritza Martin, 33, of Fort Lauderdale, at Queen of Heaven Cemetery, said Ingrid Cruz, a producer- reporter for Telemundo, Channel 51. Cruz had been trying to get a statement from Martin.

Guess this dinner show worker must have wanted his own private peep show. Kenneth Harrington, 49, an employee of Capone's Dinner and Show in Kissimmee, was busted on Friday after deputies say he hid a pen camera in the show's dressing room, reports WKMG CBS News-6 i n Orlando. Employees of the dinner show found the pen camera hidden in the dressing room on April Fool's Day. Get the DUHtails at WKMG CBS News-6 i n Orlando. More FloriDUH

On Friday morning, a new camera will begin taking photos of red light runners going east at the intersection of Boynton Beach Boulevard and North Seacrest Boulevard. Police spokeswoman Stephanie Slater said in an email that the new camera will operate 24 hours per day and capture still images and videos of every vehicle running a red light. But, during the next 30 days, only warning notices will be issued to the owners of vehicles caught running the light. There will be no fines for this warning notice.

The ad on roommates.com posted by a user with the screen name "Buttercup" described a furnished bedroom for rent with a DVD/VCR in a quiet Davie neighborhood. "Buttercup" turned out to be IRS agent Kenneth Ryals, 60, and a female tenant would eventually discover, the DVD/VCR player in the room hid a small video camera pointed at her bed. Ryals was recently ordered by a Broward County jury to pay $476,000 in damages to his former tenant, Miranda Goldston, 27, who sued him for invasion of privacy.

Action! Cameras! Maybe she just wanted to be on TV. Why else make certain that cameras are rolling as you reportedly steal a car? A woman, identified as Jean Price, allegedly swiped a TV reporter's car while he was on location investigating a possible rental property scam in Sarasota, reports WWSB ABC News-7 in Sarasota. Now the state attorney is deciding if Price should pay the price for her alleged actions. Get the DUHtails at WWSB ABC News-7 in Sarasota.

Marco Bartolon-Velasquez, 26, of Delray Beach, allegedly told cops he planted his cellphone in the women's bathroom and recorded videos so he could make sure his co-workers were doing their cleaning jobs, reports the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. A loss prevention officer walked into the bathroom and noticed a camera aimed towards the toilets hidden by a dislodged ceiling fan, the report says. Apparently wanted to watch the women do their business...not their jobs. The alleged creep is Marco Antonio Bartolon-Velasquez, 26, of Delray Beach -- a guy coworkers knew as "Raphael Dieguez," the name of his brother which he used since he had been living in country illegally, an officer wrote in the report.

A mother's intuition that something was wrong led her to install a camera in her 3-year-old daughter's bedroom to monitor a roommate's actions, and a video led to the man's arrest, police say. Emmanuel Ortega Ramirez, 26, was charged with lewd and lascivious exhibition and lewd and lascivious molestation on a victim younger than 12, according to a Lauderhill Police complaint affidavit. Ramirez lives with a family in the 2900 block of Northwest 56th Avenue, according to police.

Calling all shutterbugs. Those who capture the most classic Hollywood scene can win a prize as part of a citywide photo contest. This year has a new category for kids under 13, and the prize is a $50 gift card. For adults, first place wins you a $200 gift card. Entries are due by 5 p.m. on Halloween. To submit your photo, drop it off at City Hall or email your name, address, phone number and photo entry to photocontest@hollywoodfl.org. Please say where in Hollywood you took the photo.

We all know what wild bears do in the woods. Now we know what they do on residential lawns. When Tammy Snell's neighbor saw two bears on Snell's front lawn in longwood, she went searching for her cell phone to capture it all on video, reports the Orlando Sentinel. Snell said the bears are just a part of the scenery. "We don't want to relocate them," Snell said. "We moved into their area. it's really like living in a zoo. " Get the DUHtails at the Orlando Sentinel.